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| 4/12/26 |
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| 4/12/26 Dexter |
After being away from teaching for 15 years, I was feeling
rusty going into my ArtSpot workshop last Sunday. As soon as I sat down
with my enthusiastic students (a full class), though, my confidence returned
and anxiety vanished. It was good to be reminded of the pleasure of interacting
with creative, motivated students, which I had enjoyed for many years in my
previous life.
Drawing pets with a brush pen was the topic of the day. In
my supply list and in the email I sent to students several days prior, I
reminded them that the single-most important thing they must bring to class was
a high-quality reference photo (several to choose from, if possible). Drawing
from a tiny phone screen is less than ideal, so I encouraged them to bring a
tablet or iPad or, even better, large prints of images. I was relieved that
everyone heeded my recommendations.
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I gave the students an opportunity to try drawing from an upside-down reference image, an exercise I learned from Betty Edwards' Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain. I drew Teddy upside-down along with my students. |
In fact, although I had come prepared with my own images to
use for demos, some students had such great photos that I used them to demo
with (and gave away the results). Each demo was in response to questions that
came up. For example, the mom of the grumpy cat (the only cat! Whaaat??! Of
course, I have a preference for dogs, at least to draw, but I was certain more
would want to draw cats) asked about how to show the catchlight in
light-colored eyes and shading on very pale-colored fur. Although I feel
strongly about showing the catchlight, in this case, I concurred that it was difficult
to do with a brush pen. Instead, I showed her how to subtly shade the fur on
one side.
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| I sketched Roxy from life as she rested in a sling. |
My favorite sketch wasn’t a demo at all: It was a live sketch
of Roxy (at left), who spent the class time in a sling around the neck of shop staff
member Viani. What a sweet, quiet model she turned out to be.
My learning for the day was to figure out how to do future demos
that will be easier to see. I’m not sure I know how to demo on a large scale
using an easel, but maybe I need to learn.
Overall, I had a blast, and I hope my students found it
rewarding, too.